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WRITTEN AT MEILLERIE,

SEPTEMBER 30, 1814.

THESE
HESE grey majestic cliffs that tower to Heaven,

These glimmering glades and open chesnut-groves,

That echo to the heifer's wandering bell,

Or wood-man's axe, or steers-man's song beneath, As on he urges his fir-laden bark,

Or shout of goatherd-boy above them all,

Who loves not? And who blesses not the light,
When thro' some loop-hole he surveys the lake
Blue as a sapphire-stone, and richly set
With chateaux, villages, and village-spires,
Orchards and vineyards, alps and alpine snows?
Here would I dwell; nor visit but in thought
Ferney far south, silent and empty now

As now thy Chartreuse and thy bowers, Ripaille ;
Vevay, so long an exiled Patriot's † home

;

*

Or Chillon's dungeon-floors beneath the wave,
Channelled and worn by pacing to and fro;
Lausanne, where Gibbon in his favourite walk
Nightly called up the Shade of antient Rome;
Or Coppet, and that dark untrodden grove
Sacred to Virtue, and a daughter's tears!
Here would I dwell, forgetting and forgot;
And oft methinks (of such strange potency
The spells that Genius scatters where he will)
Oft should I wander forth like one in search,
And say, half-dreaming, "Here St. Preux has been!"
Then turn and gaze on Clarens.

Yet there is,

Within an eagle's flight, a nobler scene,

* The retreat of Amadeus, the first Duke of Savoy. Voltaire thus addresses it from his windows.

Ripaille, Je te vois. O bizarre Amédée, &c.

The residence of Necker, and

+ Ludlow. afterwards of his daughter, Madame De Staël.

That Sacred Lake* shut in among the mountains,

Mountains that flank its waves as with a wall

Built by the Giant-race before the flood;

Where not a cross or chapel but inspires

Holy delight, lifting our thoughts to God

From God-like men, men in a barbarous age

That dared assert their birth-right, and displayed
Deeds half-divine, returning Good for Ill;

That in the desert sowed the seeds of life,

Framing a band of small Republics there,

Which still exist, the envy of the World!

Who would not land in each, and tread the ground;
Land were Tell leaped ashore; and climb to drink
Of the three hallowed fountains? He, that does,
Comes back the better; and relates at home
That he was met and greeted by a race

Such as he read of in his boyish days;

Such as Miltiades at Marathon

Led, when he chased the Persians to their ships.

*The Lake of the Four Cantons.

There, while the well-known boat is heaving in, Piled with rude merchandize, or launching forth, Thronged with wild cattle for Italian fairs,

There in the sun-shine, mid their native snows,
Children, let loose from school, contend to use
The cross-bow of their fathers; and o'er-run
The rocky field where all, in every age,
Assembling sit, like one great family,

Forming alliances, enacting laws;

No cliff or head-land or green promontory
But echoing back strains of their father-land,
Graven to their eyes with records of the past
That prompt to hero-worship, and excite
Even in the least, the lowliest, as he toils,
A reverence no where else or felt or feigned;
Their chronicler great Nature; and the volume
Vast as her works-above, below, around!
The fisher on thy beach, Thermopylæ,
Asks of the lettered stranger why he came,

First from his lips to learn the glorious truth!

And who that whets his scythe in Runnemede,

Tho' but for them a slave, recalls to mind

The barons in array with their great charter?
Among the everlasting Alps alone,

There to burn on as in a Sanctuary,

Bright and unsullied lives the' ethereal flame.

'Twas Freedom kindled it; Religion guards it. And mid those scenes unchanged, unchangeable, Why should it ever die?

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